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Monday, September 2, 2013

How “Freedom of
Choice” Advocacy Has Failed Us and Why We Are Still Powerful

We first-world, privileged, white moms love talking about
personal choices—our own and those made by other parents. We talk about good
choices, bad choices, and the all-importance of choice in general. But is this focus
on individual freedom of choice serving us well, or are we missing the point?

We are in an impossible position right now. We place so much
pressure on ourselves and each other to solve the world’s problems by
individual choice. We’re self-sacrificing to the extreme and judgmental of
other parents who do things differently. But this constant analysis of every
possible choice is actually a distraction from clear-headed self-reflection and
mindful, intentional living. It takes so much mental energy to agonize over
minutiae that we lose sight of the big picture, how things outside of our
control—genes, history, culture, politics, environment, mental and emotional
and physical health, etc.—influence the whole framework of our lives, the field
of options available to us, and even our competence to make choices.

A woman carrying a child often feels that she has a whole
world inside her belly. There is truth in that feeling, but it is also true
that each one of us exists within the belly of the world. The context we live
in, the world outside of our own bodies and households, outside the realm of
our personal choices, determines the fate of our families far beyond any day-to-day
decision we make. No mother is an island; we cannot escape the injustices,
dangers, and oppressions of the world through individual choices alone. Our
power as mothers, as women, and as human beings is relational. When we stop obsessing
over individual choice and envision the big picture, we can achieve systemic
change and true empowerment.

When we think about the world around us, we often think
solely about how we can change it with our personal lifestyle choices—the
pounds we can lose to reduce health care costs, the number of incandescent
lightbulbs we can switch with compact fluorescents to slow global warming, the
fair trade products we can buy to fight poverty. Making those little changes
can be beneficial as part of an activist lifestyle. But trying to solve
macro-level problems through personal choices alone is like trying to drive a
gigantic truck with a tiny, manually powered steering wheel. You don’t have
enough torque, and it’s putting yourself and others at risk.

Sometimes the very idea of choice is used by capitalistic
and patriarchal interests as a blinder to manipulate women into giving up on
true empowerment. Consider the old “giving choices” trick many of us moms use to
get our toddlers to cooperate. In situations where it is not possible,
appropriate, fair, or safe to let a toddler truly run the shots (which is, ofcourse, most of the time), we give our children a simple, limited “choice” to
distract them from the real power dynamic. When my daughter doesn’t want to get
dressed, I ask her, “Would you like to wear blue jeans or corduroy pants?” When
she doesn’t want to leave the playground, I ask her, “Would you like to leave
now or in five minutes?” This technique gives children a little taste of
independence and freedom—just the right amount for a toddler—allowing them to
feel powerful while actually keeping them in line.

Now step back, take a look at your place in the fabric of
your national economy and political structure, and ask yourself: Are you the
mom, or are you the toddler? A recent opinion piece on Al Jazeera revealed the view of
many people outside of the United States—that we Americans are a lot like
toddlers—naïve, gullible, narcissistic, and fixated on doing things “by
myself.” And it’s not just people outside of our nation but our own media corporations that operate on those assumptions and help keep us locked into our
own cultural toddlerhood.

And unfortunately, unlike a loving mother, the corporate world
often has interests that conflict with consumers’ needs. Even well-meaning
businesses and nonprofits that seek to satisfy and serve their clients may use
the concept of free choice as leverage to manipulate disadvantaged populations
and to justify offering dangerous, unethical, or addictive products and
services, hiding behind the adage that “the customer is always right.”

The very concept of “freedom of choice,” in the broadest
sense, has failed women and parents as a true means of empowerment. In the most
egregious examples, it has not only failed to save us, it has been used against
us.

How has choice failed
American mothers?

Advocating for choice alone has sometimes been an essential
first step toward real empowerment, sometimes a distraction from real
empowerment, and sometimes a mortal impediment to real empowerment. Adding
options within a bad framework cannot achieve a real solution. The “choice” to jump
from the pot into the fire is not all we need. If we accept that defeat is
inevitable, then snatching defeat from the jaws of victory may be a face-saving
gesture that at least preserves some dignity. But we need more than the ability
to make gestures. We need true empowerment—real power to change the framework
of our lives so that we are not constantly forced into choosing the least of an
array of evils.

The “A” Word

In the case of abortion rights, the right to choose whether
to continue a pregnancy has been an essential component of women’s liberation.
But it is inadequate as an only step. The legal right to an abortion means
nothing to a woman who cannot access an abortion. Even today, there are many
obstacles to abortion access, such as poverty, lack of transportation, lack of
practitioners in an area who will perform the procedure, domestic violence, and
social shame. Wealthy, powerful women have never had much trouble obtaining
safe abortions, legal or not, and poor, disenfranchised women still have
trouble obtaining safe abortions, legal or not.

Even if a woman does have access to a safe abortion, how
empowering is that choice if the woman would have liked to carry her pregnancy
to term but does not get to choose
the option of carrying, bearing, and raising a healthy child due to conditions
outside of her personal control? What if her fetus has a gross developmental
defect because the she lives in a polluted environment? What if she is so poor
that she fears her other children will starve if she produces another mouth to
feed? What if the “woman” is a child victim of domestic violence or incest? In
these cases, abortion may be an escape from a worse fate, but it is not a
solution to the problems that have degraded the woman’s whole field of options.

A popular and brutal response to this issue is to bring it
all back to individual choice and blame the victim. It is no wonder that a
society focused intently on individual choices might immediately question whether
a woman in any bad position—poverty, teen pregnancy, abuse, or whatever the
case may be—might have brought herself there from her own bad choices: the
choice to have unprotected sex, to not fight harder against her rapist, to not
have found a way to become wealthy or healthy, etc. But all that personal
blame, especially on a playing field that is far from even, just entrenches
patterns of injustice, inequality, prejudice, and disempowerment. Decades after
Roe, we are still having these misogynistic conversations and listening to
appalling dramas in our government chambers about women’s agency over their
reproductive and sexual capacities.

Women of color voiced the need for a shift away from
personal choice, starting with the abortion issue, about 20 years ago. A
grassroots coalition called SisterSong coined the term “reproductive justice”
in 1994, a framework that includes but is much broader than abortion rights.
Women of color (and men of color, and people of any disenfranchised minority)
know that there are many more constraints on people’s power to live freely than
the legality of personal choice alone. People need more than the legal right to
choose; they need their cultural, political, and economic shackles and crosses
and burdens lifted. And they need connections to other people, to their
families and churches and township boards and local economies and governments
and all who represent them and make possible a humane standard of living.
Adding choices is so much easier, but so much less effective, than dismantling
the existing social constraints that unfairly limit people’s power.

Reproductive justice is about making possible a better menu
of choices, not just a longer menu. It is about the quality of the choices over
the quantity. A Sophie’s Choice is not empowerment. It’s torture. SisterSong
had this figured out long ago, and white women and men are now catching up and
bringing their powers of privilege on board.

This issue has some parallels and some important differences
with the abortion issue. There are cultural, physical, and economic constraints
on how a woman can give birth, but on the level of individual choice, there are
no legal constraints. The primary obstacles to a woman’s ideal birth experience
are usually related to her (or her child’s) health or anatomy. There are also
social constraints—a woman’s family or peer group may have strong opinions
about where and how she gives birth—and for financial or geographic reasons, a
woman may not have access to the care provider or birth location of her choice.

There is a parallel here in that before Roe v. Wade, most women did not have
access to safe abortion services. Choice activists fought for legally regulated
abortion care services so that women could be free to make safe choices—not to
support back alley abortionists in carrying on their business as usual.

Yet “birth choice” activism campaigns sometimes take the
side of freedom for service providers, not consumers. One real problem with
birth in the United States is that not all women have access to safe, high
quality obstetric care. The quality of labor and delivery care in United States
hospitals is inconsistent, and midwife care is not as common as in many other
nations with high standards of living.

Another unique characteristic of the
United States’ birth landscape is that our advocates for midwifery often frame
midwife care as antithetical to medical care, not complementary, and as a
practice that should not be regulated. Activist campaigns for “birth choice” sometimes
do not advocate for a birthing woman’s right to choose; instead, they advocate
for various businesses’ and entrepreneurs’ rights to legally sell pregnancy and
birth services without regulation, disclosure, or any other consumer
protections that are enjoyed in other nations with high quality midwife care.

There is a similarity in some campaigns that advocate for
the legalization of raw milk. “More natural” and “less processed” is viewed as
inherently better—and in many cases, it does have real benefits. But some
communities, such as Pittsburgh, enjoy legally sold raw milk that is regulated
for safety, while other communities, such as rural Michigan towns, fight for
the right of vendors to sell raw milk without safety regulations, which results
in more cases of dangerous infection. Pittsburgh residents are free to make
dairy choices without the constraint of the threat of serious illness, while
Michigan residents are not. This is one of many examples of how freedom of
choice for sellers does not equate to, or necessarily result in, freedom of
choice for buyers.

This is an important distinction because although allowing a
wider variety of practitioners to serve pregnant women could potentially benefit
those women, ultimately it is a conflict of interest for them to fight consumer
protections. If there is no regulation ensuring safety standards, pregnant
women are simply thrust into a bewildering morass of choices that includes unlabeled
booby traps—practitioners who are unskilled, incompetent, irresponsible, or even
unscrupulous. And a woman or family who suffers injury or fatality in the hands
of such a provider has little or no legal recourse; it is simply judged after
the fact that the woman must have made a poor individual choice.

To draw focus back to the big picture, pregnant mothers in
the United States start out with greater challenges than pregnant women in
other first world nations. Pregnant women in the U.S. have many more serious
health problems before they go into labor, and there are measurable differences
in the treatment of American birthing women based on race, class, weight, and
income. These problems of wellness and inequality are more difficult to address
than adding all kinds of “birth choice” options and thrusting a greater burden
of responsibility to “educate yourselves” and “make the right choice” onto the
most disenfranchised populations, but those larger contextual problems are the real
obstacles that stand in the way of birthing women’s true power and freedom.

The ABCs of
Vaccination

Abortion choice is an important but incomplete step toward
justice. Birth choice has been, in some cases, subverted by capitalistic
interests. But the entire issue of the choice to opt out of vaccinations is
based solely the fraud of one criminal. It has resulted in epidemic disasters
affecting innocent children and other vulnerable people who cannot protect
themselves with individual choice. Well-meaning women like you and me—hyper-conscious,
educated, white moms—have unwittingly set up their own families and vaccine-optional
Waldorf schools as the epicenters for deadly plagues.

Like celebrity advocates of out-of-hospital birth, anti-vax
promoters prey upon first-world mothers’ fears—real threats against our
families—and educational gaps—our privileged position of never having had to
face the diseases that plagued our ancestors and still torment our neighbors
around the developing world. Our children today are struggling with many new
diagnoses such as autism, autoimmune disorders, and developmental disorders
that were unknown in previous generations and are still not fully understood.
It’s scary to deal with such life-consuming problems of dubious origin, and so
it is attractive to buy into any conspiracy theory that promises we can solve
these problems with simple, individual choices. Add into the mix true stories
from the past, when early vaccines were sometimes more dangerous or harmful
than they were worth, and millions of moms are sold.

This is the same tactic con artists use to draw women away
from medical care in childbirth: telling horror stories of the past, such as previous
centuries’ hospital birth practices, ignoring the fact that things are
dramatically different—in hospitals and with midwives—today. First-world women
who have never seen a friend die in childbirth or a baby die from whooping
cough find it easy to ignore those real risks of avoiding modern medicine and
instead turn their focus on dangers made up, but vividly illustrated, by
scammers.

The choice of whether to vaccinate is strictly a first-world
problem. Only privileged mothers can reasonably consider the choice to opt out
or even amend their children’s vaccination schedules. Ironically, it is only
because of previous generations’ commitment to vaccination that we can even
entertain the fantasy that opting out without a medical reason may be the best
choice for our families. Tragically, that privileged choice does nothing to
combat the real health problems we see in our children. It only leaves our
families, and others around us without the privilege of choice, vulnerable to a
host of additional illnesses.

Less Talk, More
Action

The root problems that oppress mothers, women, children, and
all vulnerable populations in the United States are systemic issues of
inequality and injustice. Personal choices are neither primarily responsible
for them nor able to solve them. It is easier for us privileged mothers to hide
our heads in the sand and obsess over individual choices than to own and wield
our privilege for social change. It’s tempting to believe that we don’t have
the responsibility to solve others’ problems, but we can avoid our own children’s
autism, deadly allergies, and behavioral disorders with personal choices. It’s
easier to turn down a shot than to tackle environmental toxins, modern diet and
lifestyle challenges, and disorders without known causes.

White people have long been bogged down in our own concepts
of individualism. Have you ever slogged through the mire of anxiety over
personal choices that is Dostoevsky’s Notes
from Underground? How about the central question in Kant’s categorical
imperative for all ethics, focused on the individual: “What if everyone in the
world made the same choice?” The obsession with personal choice is a classic darling
of patriarchal Western thought. Its corollaries include victim-blaming and
self-hatred. It is associated with characteristically Western forms of
psychological issues related to control, such as eating disorders, drug
addictions, hoarding, gambling, and paranoid delusions. Our compulsions send us
even further out of control. And our beloved long lists of choices fuel our unhappiness.

But when we take off our blinders and accept that our
individual choices cannot quick-fix macro-level problems, we also let ourselves
off the hook. We privileged mothers are not the cause of all our problems,
but at the same time, we hold real power to effect change in our own lives and
in the world. It’s not always intuitive, but hearts must open before minds can
open. A hateful or fearful mind, no matter how intelligent, is impervious to
reason. The passage of laws can smooth the way for attitude changes. For
example, legally enforced school desegregation led to an immediate social
attitude shift in favor of desegregation. Sometimes focusing too much on
education, intellect, and debate is putting the cart before the horse. It doesn’t
have to be this hard.

It’s time we cut ourselves some slack. Let’s stop
incessantly “educating ourselves” with a smorgasbord of true and untrue and
misleading information. Let’s lift our heads out of the sand, out of our petty
and mommy-war-mongering magazines and celebrity advice manuals. Educated people
are no less susceptible to conspiracy theories, and smart people are no more likely
to be emotionally stable and capable of always making good choices. Arguments
and debates are ineffective tools for change. Real justice starts with the
ears, heart, and hands. We women of privilege must listen to the voices of
people with different struggles than ours and reach out to help.

This is not simple altruism, either; it is the only way to
effectively heal and improve ourselves. When we recognize differences in
privilege and reach out to those who are different from us, strangely enough we
often uncover our own prejudices for the first time, of which we have been
unaware, and we really begin to learn how similar and intertwined our lives and
desires and needs truly are with the lives and needs and desires of our diverse
neighbors.

Mothers, as women and as creators and nurturers of human
life, hold the world in our weary, strong, and gentle hands. As voters, women
outnumber men, and parents outnumber the childless. As primary consumers,
mothers fuel the economy. As caregivers of the young and the old and the
disabled and the downtrodden, women are the glue of all social fabric. Mothers’
strength and power is found not in the rugged individualism of a Wild West
cowboy but in the act of reaching out and linking hands with other women—sharing
lives, energies, wisdom, gifts, talents, kindness, resources, time, and
whatever each one of us has in abundance. Our true power lies not in the
micromanagement of personal choices but in the social structures we build and
shore up within our families, our neighborhoods, our culture, our mother
nation, and our mother earth.

Instead of telling others how to make their own decisions,
let us commit to showing our support for each other by breaking down the real,
existing barriers to freedom and empowerment.

If public policy change and lawmaking excite you, get
involved with a political action network. Don’t just forward alerts and click
to sign petitions; reap the personal benefits and multiply your effectiveness
by attending events, joining campaign drives, and meeting with legislators.

If politics makes you sick, don’t worry. Your spirit is most
useful where it is called to serve. Tap into your personal inspirations and
gifts and join a nonprofit that nurtures empowerment. Tutor a child, distribute food, or greet clients in the front office.

The personal choice
to connect with a greater force for good, to reach out and make a difference in
someone else’s life, is a personal choice that truly means something.

Monday, November 5, 2012

This election season, Mama Elle has been reading 19th century novels to put politics in perspective. Many people are feeling frustrated and let down about American politics this week, but not Mama Elle! I am so happy and proud to go to the polls tomorrow, with my little daughter in tow, who just learned the word "vote" on Sesame Street. (Big Bird, we've got your back.)

Two hundred years ago, people fought just as foolishly over partisan issues as they do today. But the front lines of those battles took place at very different places along the arc of justice than they do now. Even just one hundred years ago, American families were still dying in the streets to protest child slave labor and fight for women's right to vote. In the 19th century, white politicians squabbled over what do do about "Negro freemen." Now, our President is a man of mixed race. A hundred years ago, my grandmother's grandmother was not allowed to vote. Now, women are voting for equal rights in the workplace and the doctor's office. Sure, there is some really offensive misogynist talk going on in the legislature around women's health care, but in prior centuries a woman's lady business was not even fit conversation inside of the home, let alone an area worthy of protection under the law. In centuries past, homosexuals could be locked up and tortured in sanatoriums just because of their sexuality, and the youth of today is building an America where people of all sexual orientations and gender identities can live freely and openly, with full civil rights.

The fact that there are still some people in America who haven't caught on, who aren't ready for progress, is no reason to despair. I am grateful for how far we have come and exhilarated to live in a period of time when things are changing so much and so fast. Progress can seem frustratingly slow, but on the scale of human history, we are on the frontier of a rapidly blossoming future, a time like no other that has ever come before.

I am proud to be educated on my local candidates, the nonpartisan section of my ballot, and my state proposals. And I am proud to support my President. In just the past four years, President Obama has:

made it easier for my husband to find a new job when he lost his old one by supporting small businesses;

saved
the health and lives of many of my daughter's age cohorts by providing
health coverage to them;

supported my access to prenatal and
postpartum care;

made it less likely for any more of my
acquaintances to die from war;

given me hope that I can afford to
send my daughter to college;

helped revitalize struggling cities
like mine;

prevented the zombie apocalypse (err, auto industry total collapse) from originating in
Detroit, which is too close for comfort;

Anybody who says President Obama "couldn't
get anything done" is tuned into the wrong station. I am voting
confidently, proudly, and happily tomorrow for a candidate who has done
right by my family and my country. Tomorrow, my daughter will see her mother and father vote proudly, grateful to take part in the great, messy, still progressing dance of democracy.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Did you notice the appeal to mothers in both Michelle Obama's speech and Ann Romney's speech at the National Conventions? The voting power of American mothers is huge, and so is our need to use it wisely this election season.

The United States of America ranks 25th among developed nations in the latest State of the World's Mothers Report. This is hopeful news--we ranked 31st last year--and also a challenge for us to call on our elected officials to do better for our nation's families. Some of our biggest deficits are in the areas of maternal and infant health, parental leave, and wage fairness for women--especially mothers.

We are mothers, at the most basic levels, because we bear children and then provide for them. As voting time approaches, consider researching your candidates' positions on the things that most impact our ability to bear, raise, and provide for healthy and successful children:

complete, affordable health care access for women and children (including full reproductive and prenatal care)

paid maternity leave

paid sick days

nutritional programs for children and mothers

protection against toxins in consumer products, food, water, and air

support for K-12 schools, colleges, and universities

affordable childcare options

scholarships for mothers in higher education

Don't forget to make sure you are registered to vote. Voter suppression threats affect women more than any other demographic group. If you have recently gotten married or divorced, changed your name for any other reason, or moved, or if you don't have a driver's license, you may be barred from voting unless you come prepared.

Who run this mother?

Mama Elle believes that a mother's love is the strongest force of nature, pushing each generation in America to be happier, healthier, smarter, and more compassionate than the one before. Mama Elle balances her passion for justice with trust in the natural power of maternal love.